On Fri, Jul 18, 2014 at 12:10:34PM -0700, Adrian Chadd wrote:
> Hi!
>
>
> On 18 July 2014 07:28, Lars Engels <lars.eng...@0x20.net> wrote:
> > On Thu, Jul 17, 2014 at 10:21:17PM +0200, Andreas Nilsson wrote:
> >> On Thu, Jul 17, 2014 at 10:15 PM, Navdeep Parhar <npar...@gmail.com> wrote:
> >>
> >> > On 07/17/14 13:12, Adrian Chadd wrote:
> >> > > On 17 July 2014 13:03, Alberto Mijares <amijar...@gmail.com> wrote:
> >> > >> On Thu, Jul 17, 2014 at 2:58 PM, Adrian Chadd <adr...@freebsd.org>
> >> > wrote:
> >> > >>> Hi!
> >> > >>>
> >> > >>> 3) The binary packages need to work out of the box
> >> > >>> 4) .. which means, when you do things like pkg install apache, it
> >> > >>> can't just be installed and not be enabled, because that's a bit of a
> >> > >>> problem;
> >> > >>
> >> > >>
> >> > >> No. Please NEVER do that! The user must be able to edit the files and
> >> > >> start the service by himself.
> >> > >
> >> > > Cool, so what's the single line command needed to type in to start a
> >> > > given package service?
> >> >
> >> > Aren't sysrc(8) and service(8) for this kind of stuff?
> >> >
> >>
> >> They sure are.
> >>
> >> Well, pkg install $service ; sysrc ${service}_enable="YES" would do.
> >> Although some services have different names than the packge, which is sort
> >> of annoying.
> >
> > I hacked up a solution for service(8):
> >
> > http://bsd-geek.de/FreeBSD/service.sh.enable-disable.patch
> >
> > The patch adds the following directives to service(8):
> >
> > enable: Grabs an rc script's rcvar value and runs "sysrc foo_enable=YES"
> > disable: The opposite of enable
> > rcdelete: Deletes an rc script's rcvar value from /etc/rc.conf using
> > "sysrc -x foo_enable"
> >
> > The nice thing about is that you can use one of the new directives on
> > one line with the old ones, as long as the new are the first argument:
> >
> > # service syslogd enable
> > # service apache24 disable stop
> > # service apache24 rcdelete stop
> > # service nginx enable start
> >
> >
> > So after installing a package, to start and enable a daemon permanently
> > all you have to run is
> > # service foo enable start
> >
> > Lars
> >
> > P.S.: Thansk to Devin for his hard work on sysrc!
>
> Having a way for sysrc and service to know what particular options and
> services are exposed by a given package or installed "thing" would be
> nice. Right now the namespace is very flat and it's not obvious in all
> instances what needs to happen to make it useful and what the options
> are.
>
> "Oh, hm, I'd like to know what options there are for controlling the
> installed apache24 package, let's see"...
>
> I remember IRIX having that command to list services, stop them and
> start them, configure them enabled and disabled. Solaris grew
> something like that with Solaris 10 and after the initial learning
> curve it was great. Hving something like that would be 100% awesome.

Advertising

I've updated the patch and extended it a little:
https://phabric.freebsd.org/D451
It can now print the rc options for a service.
It needs however to have the options listed as comments between the
KEYWORDS section and the sourcing of /etc/rc.subr.
And I've made some changes to rc.subr itself:
https://phabric.freebsd.org/D452
So now you can use
# service sshd describe
Secure Shell Daemon
and
# service sshd extracommands
configtest keygen reload
Sorry for the mess in phabricator's SUMMARY. I will learn the markup
syntax later...
Lars